Monday, April 14, 2014

Hyper kerning























I found this VERY tightly kerned book cover at a flea market in Milan last summer. Just found the image on my phone and thought it was worth posting.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Explosive package.





















Major uses of potassium nitrate or "salt petre" are in fertilizers, rocket propellants and fireworks. I just like the quirkiness of the label design for such a potent product. Although the Y in Quality looks like it is trying a bit too hard. Found on eBay.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Spirograph, elevated.






















Remember Spirographs? I found a fairly pristine set at a garage sale recently, but these are made by someone who is inspired by Spirographs, but has taken the math to a new level. Check out the rest: http://www.eddaardvark.co.uk/python_patterns/spirograph.html

Sunday, September 29, 2013

The Chapbook Style























When Will Bradley started working at Cambridge Press, he would often visit the Boston Public Library and peruse the collection of colonial American chapbooks housed there. It is easy to see why a typehound would delight in the typesetting done for these cheaply printed books that were peddled by traveling chapmen. This particular example is actually British. One of the things I find interesting is the mixed posture of the letters in the word ELEANOR.

Monday, September 16, 2013























This flourished fraktur capital letter M was pasted into a sketchbook of romantic lettering that some wonderful British gentlemen put together during the nineteenth century. Exuberant hand-drawn scripts became popular after Gutenberg's innovative moveable type was introduced, 1450's. Scribes no longer were needed to copy texts, so they could go hog wild inventing letterforms for the new middle class to copy (in order to look and feel more upper class, of course.)

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Allner does it again.




















Another great Walter Allner cover for Fortune magazine. 1952.

Boundless bindings.














M and I found these in a tiny tiny tiny little antique bookshop in Florence, Italy. These are bound with handprinted florentine papers and the leather strips are hand stamped and applied afterward.